The Tongue of Fire

By the time Tongue of Fire was first published in 1856, the once strong Methodist movement in Great Britain was slowly declining into a "form of religion without the power," as John Wesley feared it would. Now an established denominational body, it bared more resemblance to the tired Church of England than the spirit-fired movement which defined the first Methodists.

Born in 1819, William Arthur was one of a rising generation Wesleyan leaders who saw that the Holy Spirit, who had so mightily breathed life into the movement, was being slowly omitted from Methodist preaching and practice. His Tongue of Fire or the True Power of Christianity is, in essence, a manifesto inviting Methodists to again recover their birthright as an Apostolic movement living in the fullness of the Holy Spirit.

The writings represented in The John Wesley Collection resourced the early Methodists in their quest to spread the gospel, and continue to be the most relevant and helpful messages to offer today’s body of believers the transformation of ancient truth.